BUSINESS IN BRIEF
21/10
Gold prices decline in local market
Gold prices went down VND150,000 (US$6.7) per tael or 37.5 gm in the local market yesterday from last week's rate. The Sai Gon Jewellery Joint Stock Company sold a tael of gold from the State-owned gold brand SJC for VND33.97 million ($1,519). Doji Gold and Gems Group reduced the selling price for a tael of gold from VND34.02 million ($1,522) to VND33.94 million ($1,518) while Phu Nhuan Jewelry Company (PNJ) sold one tael of gold for VND33.92 million ($1,517). Bao Tin Minh Chau Gold and Jewellery Company listed their selling rate for one tael of gold at VND33.92 ($1,517), recording a buying/selling ratio of 60/40 within the day for the valuable metal. Most of the gold and jewelry companies thought that the local prices of gold were influenced by lower global prices. According to international media, gold struggled after three days of losses on Tuesday, hurt by a stronger dollar and fears the Federal Reserve could still raise US interest rates this year. On the global gold trading website Kitco.com, the price for one ounce of gold was $1,173.20 ($1,413 per tael). Thus, the local price for each tael of gold was $104 higher than the global gold prices. Meanwhile, in the local forex market, most commercial banks sold a dollar at around VND22,350 and VND22,370 each while the ceiling price of the State Bank was VND22,547 per dollar. The rates of each dollar were of 10 or 20 dong lower than yesterday's rate. Quoc Trinh Gold and Jewelry Company in Ha Trung Street, which was popular for currency exchange in Ha Noi, bought each dollar for VND22,320 and sold each for VND22,360. On September 28, the SBV slashed the interest rate cap on dollar deposits offered by commercial banks to organisations and companies from 0.25 per cent to zero per cent per year, while the rate for individuals was reduced from 0.75 per cent to 0.25 per cent. According to the latest report of Vietcombank Securities Company, the SBV circular would closely control the trading of foreign currency in the local market and help curb speculation and hoarding of the greenback, therefore reducing the demand for foreign currency in the market. The company said that it did not see any obvious factors that may put significant pressure on exchange rate by the end of 2015. The company said at the end of the year, demand for foreign currency may rise to meet payment demands and production orders at year end, however, the foreign direct investment disbursements and remittances are expected to continue a positive trend. In the first nine months of this year, disbursements of FDI reached $9.7 billion while the remittances for all of 2015 are expected to reach between $13 billion and $14 billion.
VN
President welcomes GE Chairman
State President Truong Tan Sang met with Jeffrey Immelt,
Chairman and CEO of the US industrial giant General Electric (GE), in Hanoi
on October 19.
President Sang lauded GE’s business expansion, particularly in
health, wind energy, construction and aviation, in Vietnamese localities,
saying the conglomerate is becoming a long-term partner for Vietnam’s of
sustainable development.
Talking about the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and other
agreements that Vietnam takes part in, he said Vietnam is actively integrating
and hopes for support from development partners.
Immelt, who is also head of the US President’s Council on Job
and Competitiveness, said his firm intends to reach Vietnam’s remote areas
while attempting to increase the rate of locally made materials in the
country through high-quality manpower training.
Concerning the TPP, Immelt claimed the success of domestic
small- and medium-sized companies lays the groundwork for the pact
implementation.
Acronis Partners with NTS Group Software Distributor in
Vietnam
Acronis®, the global leader in new generation data protection,
today announced a partnership with NTS Group to promote and distribute
Acronis products and solutions in Vietnam.
NTS plans to target small and mid-size businesses (SMBs) with
Acronis Backup for Windows Server, as well as home office and personal
usersAcronis Backup for Windows with Acronis True Image 2016, which supports
Windows andMac computers and mobile devices with full disk-image backup
functionality and a family dashboard to manage multiple devices online.
Powered by the AnyData Engine, Acronis solutions enable
customers to safely backup, migrate, protect and recover critical data in any
location and any physical or virtual environment. The growing IT market in
Vietnam creates new market opportunities for adopting Acronis solutions,
which is already trusted by over 500,000 businesses and 5 million consumers
in over 145 countries around the world.
According to country analysis prepared by BMI Research, the
size of Vietnam’s software sales market will expand from VND 9.9 trillion in
2015 to VND 16.1 trillion (USD $644 million) in 2019, growing at a 12.4
percent compound annual growth rate (CAGR), partly driven by security
products.
In the same period the demand for cloud computing will expand
the IT services market at a CAGR of 16.8 percent, reaching VND 29.8 trillion
(USD $1,192 million) in 2019.
For the consumer market, out of the 90 million people
currently living in Vietnam, 40 million use Internet-connected devices and 22
million have smartphones. According to the IDC report released earlier this
year, Vietnam remains the only major growing PC market in Asia, with over 2
million units being sold in the country each year.
“We see a great opportunity for providing data protection
solutions in Vietnam. We are excited about the partnership with NTS and
honored that NTS has chosen Acronis as their preferred vendor for backup,
disaster recovery, and secure access solutions. We are confident that the
Vietnamese market will benefit from our solutions and NTS will help
businesses and consumers to protect and secure their important data,” said
Danny Ong, Business Manager APJ at Acronis.
NTS Group has a proven track record in promoting, distributing
and supporting security software in Vietnam. For example, the company was
successful in making Kaspersky Antivirus the number one antivirus solution in
the country, among many other brands.
“Acronis will bring leading products, a leading brand,
good support, and good price point to Vietnam. Our plan is to make Acronis as
the data protection solution of choice for the Vietnam market,” said Ngo Tran
Vu, Marketing Director of NTS ICT Corporation.
Electricity sector copes with water shortages
The Electricity of Vietnam (EVN) corporation has stepped up
efforts and preparations to cope with droughts and water shortages caused by
the El Nino phenomenon to ensure a stable supply of electricity nationwide.
El Nino is an abnormal weather phenomenon caused by the
warming of the Pacific Ocean.
It began at the end of 2014, and it was expected to last until
next year, the EVN said.
According to the EVN, water volumes in reservoirs in the North
and Central regions of the country have been much lower than normal since
August, especially water levels in reservoirs in the Central Highlands, which
have dropped to record lows.
Le Dinh Ban, Deputy Director of A Vuong Hydropower Joint Stock
Company under the EVN, said the rainy season began in September, but the
average speed of the water flow in rivers has been recorded at 17 cubic
metres per second, a drop of 68 percent compared to the same period last
year. As a result, A Vuong Hydropower Plant only operated from four to six
hours per day.
The National Steering Committee for Disaster Prevention and
Control asked the Ministry of Industry and Trade to reserve water and to
collaborate with the Ministry of Agricultural and Rural Development to
properly manage and ensure water supply for daily needs and agricultural
production.
The committees also asked the two ministries and relevant
agencies to place priority on providing water for irrigation stations,
especially during drought periods.
To address the problem of water shortage, the EVN said it
would manage water usage in a proper manner to ensure adequate water supply for
low-lands and to reserve water.
The EVN aims to ensure adequate coal supply for Duyen Hai 1
and Vinh Tan 2 thermal-power plants, which provide electricity for the South.
In addition, it will accelerate the construction of other power plants in
Binh Thuan, Tra Vinh and Thai Binh.
In October, despite water shortages, the electricity sector
said it will ensure water supply and reservation.
It was projected that the loads (the amount of electric power
used by a machine) of the national grid will reach 164.4 billion kWh at the
end of this year, an increase from 12 to 13 percent compared to 2014, the EVN
said.
The EVN said it has taken measures to ensure that reserved
water volumes would be enough to fill reservoirs at the end of this year, and
ensure water supply for electricity generation in the dry season next year.
In addition, it has taken steps to repair and upgrade coal
thermal-power plants and turbine systems to ensure that they will function
properly in the rainy season this year. This will help to maximise the
reservation of water, it said.
The EVN also prepared plans to handle electricity shortages in
case the Central-South grid had any problems, considering it experienced
overloads over the last year.-
Dollar lending interest rate stays unchanged despite deposit
cut
The US dollar lending interest rate has remained unchanged
though the central bank has recently made a significant cut on dollar deposit
rates.
On September 28, the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) slashed the
interest rate cap on dollar deposits offered by commercial banks to organisations
and companies from 0.25 percent to zero percent per year, while the rate for
individuals was reduced from 0.75 percent to 0.25 percent per year.
After the move, businesses expected the dollar lending rate
would reduce from between 3 percent and 3.5 percent per year, to roughly
between 2.5 percent and 3 percent, which would help them cut input costs to
enhance competitiveness.
The businesses estimated that the rate between 2.5 percent and
3 percent rate was reasonable as it still helped lenders make profits after
deducting costs for capital mobilisation and setting aside for compulsory
reserves regulated by the central bank.
Hoang Thi Lan, director of a consumer goods import company,
which often borrows US dollar from commercial banks, said as dollar lending
often faced foreign exchange volatile risks, the lending interest rate must
be attractive enough to offset the risks.
However, experts said that it would be difficult to see a
reduction in the dollar lending rate as lenders currently encouraged
borrowers to be access to dong loans instead of dollar loans to avoid the
foreign exchange volatility.
Besides, the dong lending interest rate currently has reduced
significantly, making the rate gap between the dong and the dollar loans
insignificant, they said.
Commercial banks forecast that demands for dollar loans would
not increase with customers adopting a wait-and-see attitude about the
volatility of the domestic foreign exchange, though the central bank affirmed
that it would keep the forex rate steady this year and even in the first
quarter next year.
Last week, the central bank said that the dollar deposit
interest rate cut last month would not cause economic losses for
organisations or individuals, adding that it is more beneficial to shift to
the dong as the difference between the interest rates on dollar and dong
deposits was now above 5 percent.
The central bank recommended that companies making future
payments in dollar transfer their dollar deposits into the dong to eliminate
any potential opportunity costs and purchase dollar under a forward contract
for the payment.
According to the central bank, the forward contract will
enable the company to exchange an amount of currency in a specific future
date for a specific rate in order to avoid exchange rate risks. Interest
payments from the new dong deposits would both make up for the cost of the
forward contract and generate profits for the firms.
Thai Nguyen tea producers focus on domestic market
Tea producers and processors in the northern mountainous
province of Thai Nguyen are focusing on the domestic market over foreign
options as a stable means of development, according to the provincial
Department of Agriculture and Rural Development.
The province currently sells an average of 31,500 tonnes of
tea to the domestic market every year, or 80 percent of its total yearly
output of over 39,000 tonnes.
Only 20 percent of Thai Nguyen tea is sold abroad, mostly in
Pakistan , Russia , China , Japan and the Republic of Korea , with lower
prices than those in the domestic market.
Phan Huy Binh, Chairman of the Board of Members of Trung
Nguyen company, said that his firm exports about 1 million USD worth of tea
per year priced between 1.7-2.3 USD per kilogramme, much lower than domestic
price of at least 200,000 VND (9 USD) per kilogram.
Meanwhile, Do Thi Duc Ly, Director of Tan Cuong-Hoa Binh
company – another leading tea enterprise in Thai Nguyen, said that in the
past, her company exported about 2,500 tonnes of processed tea each year but
yielded low profit.
The firm has recently focused on promoting trademarks and
developing in the domestic market through major supermarkets and
distributors, helping it gain a stable position in the market, she
said.
In the past nine months, the company earned 6.2 billion VND
(278,000 USD), up 20 percent over the same period last year, noted Ly, adding
that the firm has also invested in upgrading its equipment and machines to
raise its capacity to process 18 tonnes of fresh buds each day.
According to the Thai Nguyen Department of Agriculture and
Rural Development, a number of famous local enterprises, cooperatives and tea
areas have also gained market shares in the domestic market with increasing
sales volumes.
Can Tho, Dutch city work to curb after-harvest agricultural
loss
Can Tho authorities met with the mayor of the Netherlands’ Oss
city to discuss cooperation on reducing the loss of agricultural produce
after harvest on October 19.
The yield lost across the Mekong Delta city has been caused by
outdated technology and transport, and reliance on traditional methods that
overlook the importance of preservation.
The situation has damaged the sector’s quality and quantity.
Poor preservation often results in vitamins and minerals lost and even
products contaminated. This pushes prices down by up to 20 percent.
Oss’ Mayor Wobine Buijs Gkaudemans said Can Tho’s soil and
weather are similar to her hometown. She said she hopes to cooperate to
prevent post-harvest losses.
Oss will send experts and specialised machinery to Can Tho in
a bid to improve local performances in processing, preserving and packaging
produce, the mayor said.
Can Tho People’s Committee Chairman Le Hung Dung spoke about
local commitments to helping farmers access non-interest loans and improve
transport infrastructure.
Dutch investors are welcomed in with a favourable business
climate and policies, he said.-
State capital investment corporation set to be strategic
investor
The State Capital Investment Corporation (SCIC) targets to
become a government strategic investor with total assets of 22.5 billion USD
by 2020, as heard at a ceremony marking its 10th founding anniversary in
Hanoi on October 19.
It was awarded with the Labour Order, the first class, on the
occasion.
National Assembly Chairman Nguyen Sinh Hung and Deputy Prime
Minister Vu Van Ninh attended the ceremony.
By 2030, it is set to develop into a regional-scale financial
corporation that manages a combined 46 billion USD.
Looking back at the past 10 years, the SCIC exercised its
State ownership representation rights in around 1,000 enterprises worth more
than 8.7 trillion VND (395.4 million USD), including six equitised
corporations. At the PM’s request, an additional 20 State-owned corporations
and groups will transfer their ownership rights to the SCIC from
2015-2016.
The return on equity ratio averages 15-17 percent, bringing a
total after-tax profit of more than 30 trillion VND (1.36 billion USD).
Compared to 2005, its turnover has soared 65-fold, total
assets are up 14 times, State budget contribution is up 41 times and
after-tax profits have increased 61.5 times.
The SCIC has offloaded State capital to pull in 5.36 trillion
VND (243.6 million USD) and its portfolio now comprises 230 firms with a
booking value of 17 trillion VND (772 million USD) and market value of 78
trillion VND (3.54 billion USD).
Its total equity is currently valued at nearly 35 trillion VND
(1.59 billion USD).
It has also taken the lead in equitisation with 90 percent of
its single-member limited liability companies going public.
In his speech, Deputy PM Ninh asked the SCIC to continue
improving its operating model, speeding up divestment in several companies
and performing its role as a shareholder in several large-scale and efficient
firms.
Gazprom seeks cooperation with Dong Nai
Representatives from Russia’s Gazprom International group had
a working session with leaders of the People’s Committee of the southern
province of Dong Nai on October 19 to discuss multifaceted cooperation with
the locality.
During the meeting, Gazprom expressed its interest in building
liquefied gas supply stations serving the transport sector in Dong Nai and
other southern localities.
Provincial People’s Committee Vice Chairman Tran Van Vinh
lauded Gazprom’s plan to invest in the locality, highlighting the great
potential and advantages for the firm to operate in the field.
Around 100,000 vehicles traverse national road routes in Dong
Nai every day and the province is home to 30 industrial parks (IPs), Vinh
cited.
Business and production enterprises operating in IPs directly
import and export goods through sea and river ports along the locality, he
noted, adding that the upcoming construction of the Long Thanh international
airport will present a great opportunity for clean and
environmentally-friendly fuel suppliers.
According to Vinh, Dong Nai is working to promote green
economy and as such, the use of clean energy like liquefied gas is a
priority. He went on to reveal the locality’s plan to develop a network of
500 buses powered by Compressed Natural Gas (CNG).
Kramarenko from Gazprom said his firm is implementing a
project to produce and supply natural gas for the transport sector in
Vietnam. It plans to build a liquefied gas factory with a capacity of 250,000
tonnes per year in the southern region to serve the transport and industrial
sectors.
Gazprom urged the local authorities to facilitate the group’s
plan in the province, and ratify its involvement in supplying liquefied gas
for the locality’s public transport system development plan using CNG buses.
In reply, Vice Chairman Vinh requested relevant sectors work
closely with Gazprom in order to carefully study and evaluate specific
cooperation plans in the field.
Vietnamese rice needs quality, branding improvements: experts
Improving quality and building a national brand name for
Vietnamese rice is essential to securing a firm foothold in the international
market, experts have commented.
Vietnam is facing increasingly fierce competition from
potential foreign rivals, including Cambodia, Myanmar and the US. Pressure
lies in not only pricing but also quality and branding, according to Deputy
Director of Tien Giang food company Le Thanh Khiem.
Khiem said Vietnam is the world’s third biggest rice exporter
but its rice value remains modest, adding that besides traditional markets
like the Philippines and Indonesia, the country should move towards choosy
ones such as Europe and Japan by shifting attention to quality rather than
quantity.
Additionally the country should select stable and long-term
rice varieties, since most of the current options are produced over a short
term and quickly degrade, he added.
Director of the Vietnam Institute for Economic and Policy
Research under the Vietnam National University Nguyen Duc Thanh said
concentrating on easy markets will make Vietnamese rice products reduce
quality standards in production and exports, resulting in the dwindling
competitive edge in the global market.
Particularly, when the free trade agreement with the EU and
the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement come into effect, the rice sector
will have little motivation to adjust its quality to obtain the pacts’
opportunities, he stressed.
Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Tran Tuan Anh suggested
focusing on restructuring, improving quality and building a national brand
name to avoid negative impacts when import demand declines.
The Prime Minister has approved a project developing brand
names for Vietnamese rice through 2020 and with a vision towards 2030.
Under the project, about 20 percent of local export rice is
expected to have national brand names and enter the global supply chain by
2020, increasing to 50 percent by 2030.
According to the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural
Development, rice demand in Vietnam’s traditional markets is showing positive
recovery signs, demonstrated by the country’s winning of the bids to supply
450,000 tonnes of rice to the Philippines and around 1 million tonnes to
Indonesia.
However, rice prices are forecast to decrease slightly after
the first quarter of 2016, which will require adjustments in production
structure to meet the increasing demand, said Deputy Minister Ha Cong
Tuan.
The International Monetary Fund forecasts average rice prices
in 2016 will decline by 13 percent over the previous year and the World Bank
anticipates a downward trend of 2-3 percent in the following years.
Thailand's Saha Group looks to expand business in Vietnam:
report
Thailand's largest distributor of consumer products Saha Group
is working with a Japanese company to establish a joint venture in Vietnam,
Bangkok Post reported on October 19.
It is not clear about which sector the joint venture will
operate in, but an executive with the conglomerate, now running a
distribution subsidiary in Vietnam, was quoted as saying that it is
interested in logistics, property, and wholesale.
The expansion plan has been apparently prompted by upcoming
changes brought by the ASEAN Economic Community, which will be officially
formed this year end.
"The regional community will make crossborder logistics
more important," according to the unnamed executive, who also stressed
Saha's interest in expanding its property business here in the long term.
Saha started venturing in property a few years ago, and has
developed housing projects around Thailand in collaboration with local and
Japanese partners, Bangkok Post reported.
It will continue to expand more businesses abroad,
particularly to ASEAN members, Saha chairman Boonsithi Chokwatana was quoted
as saying.
The group recently opened a garment factory in Myanmar to
serve both the domestic market and exports to Thailand, according to the news
report.
Showa Holdings launches new start-up in Vietnam
Showa Holdings Co Ltd headquartered out of Kashiwa, Chiba
Prefecture, Japan has formed a new wholly-owned subsidiary producing rubber
coated products for the construction industry in Vietnam.
“The rubber coating industry is still in its infancy and we
are excited about getting in on the ground floor of an industry that holds so
much promise,” said an official of Showa at the launch.
In addition, the nation has extensive natural rubber reserves,
which makes it an ideal location to base our production facilities and is a
primary reason we decided to locate the new venture in Vietnam.
The formation of Showa Rubber Vietnam, Co, Ltd will help
execute the group’s business strategy in Southeast Asia and become the
leading producer of coated rubber products in Asia.
Farmers, businesses remain indifferent to TPP
Farmers in the Mekong Delta region, as is true with most
businessmen and women in Vietnam, lack a solid understanding of issues
related to regional and global integration and the potential impact on their
livelihoods.
In fact, the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) formation by the
end of the year or matters related to global integration and Free Trade
Agreements (FTAs) such as the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) are little more
than some vague concept to them.
Nguyen Thanh Hai, who operates a 5,000 square metre mango tree
farm at the Tan Thuan Tay Village in the Cao Lanh district of Dong Thap
province, is a typical example.
Hai was happy to hear the news that Cao Lanh mangoes were
allowed to ship to the Republic of Korea (RoK) and Japan, but he is totally
unconcerned with whether the RoK is or is not a member of the 12 nations
comprising the TPP.
His only anxieties relate to whether or not his mangoes will
have a chance to ship to these countries and his sole focus is on increasing
mango yields and quality as part of his endeavour to get the best price for
them.
Farmers in the Mekong Delta have little to almost no
opportunity to collaborate and coordinate with others in the agriculture
industry, so they simply hope that the government will help them sell their
products stably.
However they are generally cognizant of the fact that they
face brisk competition from a wide range of fruits imported from Thailand
that have become strong favourites of Vietnamese consumers.
The agricultural industry in the Mekong Delta region is now
confronted with pressure to reinvent itself in order to adapt to the fiercer
competition resulting from the deep and wide integration process.
“The agricultural industry has only one way but to move
ahead,” especially should the TPP be ratified, said Deputy Head Pham Van Du
of the Plantation Department, adding that most likely it will need to “shift
to a larger scale model”.
Farmers will need to transition from their more traditional
production methods and retrain to more modernized and skilled ones,
better-witted with market information, Du said.
The TPP, if ratified, will undoubtedly result in an increase
in trade exchanges with Japan and the US. A reduction of import duties
brought about by the agreement should stimulate exports, especially in
agricultural and aquaculture, which are strengths of the Mekong Delta.
Director Tran Dinh Thien of the Central Institute of Economic
Management (CIEM) said the output of agricultural is currently primarily
mainly consumed by households in the region.
Scientific technology has yet to take root, allowing for
increased production and competitiveness in the global marketplace, he
underscored.
However, the Mekong Delta region’s advantage rests in
agriculture that still applies backwards traditional cultivation methods.
If it thrives and prospers in a post AEC and FTA world it must
evolve in a more decisive manner that integrates seamlessly into the global
agricultural production chain, Thiem stressed.
The proposed TPP should serve as an incentive for farmers to
improve the competitiveness of agricultural and as a consequence more and
more Vietnam products will have chances to enter many countries.
On the other hand, more foreign agricultural products will
begin to flood the Vietnam market and that’s why it’s high time to help
farmers to know what the AEC and FTAs are all about so that they are ready
for the onslaught of healthy competition.
Lotte Mart targets 60 supermarkets in Vietnam
Lotte Mart is destined to raise the number of its supermarkets
in Vietnam from current 11 to 60 by 2020.
The information was revealed by the Republic of Korea (RoK)
Vice Consul General Hoong Soon Chang at a recent ceremony to grant Lotte Mart
scholarships to 54 outstanding students from 8 universities in HCM City.
Mr Hoong said Lotte Mart is one of the major Korean investors
in Vietnam, leading in a number of business areas- retail, hotel and cinema.
Hong Won Sik, Lotte Mart Vietnam Director General, said the
group wants to pour more investment into Vietnam as a result of the nation’s
highest growth in the regional retail market.
The RoK is the largest foreign investor in Vietnam with more
than 4,000 businesses pumping US$32.8 billion into the country up to July
2015.
Local business coordinates with Japan to produce chocolate
Trong Duc Cocoa Company Ltd. is coordinating with a Japanese
partner to produce chocolate for export to Japan, the Republic of Korea and
Taiwan (China), said company’s director Dang Truong Khanh.
Khanh said initially the company plans to ship around 40 tonnes
of fresh cocoa annually.
He added that the company is cooperating with farmers in the
districts of Dinh Quan, Tan Phu, Thong Nhat and Xuan Loc to develop a special
cocoa material zone.
To ensure the product quality, the company has invested in
production after the UTZ Cocoa Certified Program and developed 134ha of cacao
with UTZ Certified good inside in Dong Nai.
The program has benefitted farmers by cutting down production
cost, and improving productivity and price. The participating farmers have
received free training on using fertilizer and pesticide.
Khanh said his company is supporting farmers to expand clean
plantation areas with the aim of building a credential brand name for Dong
Nai cocoa.
Licensing regulations put brakes on business
The granting of licences in the industry and trade has seen
shortcomings though several administrative procedures had been simplified, Le
Hong Lam, a representative from Vietnam Bar Federation, said.
Lam gave an example of the tobacco processing industry which
was granted a licence. However, the tobacco plantations and cutting of fibre
for processing were not stipulated under the current laws and not granted
licences from the local industry and trade departments.
"The regulations have caused difficulties to businesses
and have become one of the shortcomings in the current administrative
procedures," he added.
The units which are in charge of granting such licences also
said that they faced difficulty in implementing State management rules as
several administrative procedures were too common and caused a
misunderstanding or were even in conflict with each other, Tran Thi Phuong
Lan, deputy director of Hanoi's Department of Industry and Trade told the
conference held here yesterday.
The event, co-organised by the Ministry of Industry and Trade
and The European Trade Policy and Investment Support Project (EU-MUTRAP),
aimed to collect ideas on administrative procedures and regulations in the
sector.
Lan said the Circular No 58 promulgated by the ministry
stipulates that small food production units are not required to apply for
certificates of food safety. However, the Decree No 38/CP stipulates that the
initial small food production units would not need to apply for the licence.
She said the "initial" phrase in the sector has made
it difficult for the department to decide whether to grant the licence or
not.
Another case that has caused a headache is the granting of
certificates for food processing units at supermarkets.
"Both, the departments of Industry and Trade and Agriculture
and Rural Development, do not know who will have the main
responsibility," she said, adding that there was a lack of communication
between management agencies.
Sharing these ideas, Nguyen Sinh Nhat Tan, head of the
ministry's Legal Department said the publicity with regard to some
administrative procedures has not been effectively done to several
businesses.
Tan affirmed that the ministry has been extremely transparent
and clear in each administrative as well as steps for implementation.
However, it has not been strictly implemented in localities.
"Time for resolving administrative procedures is
stipulated. If ministries and localities refuse to grant licences, they are
required to provide reasons in documents," he said.
By October 10, the ministry had managed 361 administrative
procedures of which 50 are public services. He said, most of the public
services would be upgraded to level 3 or 4 in 2016. It means that almost all
applications would be implemented online to save time and costs for
businesses.
The ministry also published all administrative procedures on
its website: http://kstthc.moit.gov.vn.
Fibre plant closes due to big losses
The Dinh Vu Polyester Fibre Plant in the northern port city of
Hai Phong has shut down and faces bankruptcy after only one year of operating
due to losses.
The plant has the total investment of nearly VND7 trillion
(about US$310 million) and planned to use materials from the Dung Quat Oil
Refinery Plant to make fibre. PetroVietnam (PVN) owns 75 per cent of the
plant.
But since the plant started to operate in May last year, it
continuously could not sell its products.
Observation of the Tuoi tre (Youth) newspaper's correspondent
showed that the plant's large property did not have anybody in it except for
some guards at the gate.
Most of rooms in the plant were locked, and only some workers
passed by to maintain equipment.
It was the second time this year the plant had to temporarily
closed, according to the newspaper's research. The first time it stopped its
work was from January 6 to March 12. The second time was from September 9 and
is scheduled to last until the end of this year.
About 1,000 workers of the plant are temporarily out of work.
A spokesperson for the plant told the newspaper that it was
because by the end of March this year, the plant suffered a loss of VND1.7
trillion (about $76.5 million).
Reasons for the losses were that expenses were higher than
expected.
For instance, it was scheduled to spend about $4.6 million on
electricity a year, but in fact the plant spent $12 million on power.
It planned to use $500,000 for chemicals a year, but in fact
it needed $11 million.
The plant could not sell its products due to some quality
problems, said the speaker.
According to a report from the Ministry of Industry and Trade,
the plant produced 32,000 tonnes of products in the first five months this
year, but sold only 23,000 tonnes. The plant lost at least VND3.3 million
($140) for each tonne of products.
To improve the plant's condition, PVN proposed the Ministry of
Finance and Ministry of Industry and Trade give the plant breaks on taxes and
some expenses such as electricity, land and waste water treatment during the
next two years.
PVN also proposed the two ministries give preferential
treatment on taxes and loans for domestic fibre plants which buy the plant's
products.
But the two ministries did not accept the proposal.
To reduce the plant's difficulties in the short term, the
Ministry of Industry and Trade sent a document to textile plants and
associations asking them to give priority to products of the plant.
But a representative from the ministry said that the plant's
financial condition still faced a lot of obstacles and it could go bankrupt.
State investment firm sets assets target
The State Capital Investment Corporation (SCIC) expects to
have assets of US$22.5 billion by 2020, it said at a ceremony marking its 10th
founding anniversary in Ha Noi yesterday.
By 2030, it is set to develop into a regional-scale financial
corporation that manages a combined $46 billion.
National Assembly Chairman Nguyen Sinh Hung and Deputy Prime
Minister Vu Van Ninh attended the ceremony.
Looking back at the past 10 years, the SCIC exercised its
State ownership representation rights in around 1,000 enterprises worth more
than VND8.7 trillion ($395.4 million), including six equitised corporations.
At the PM's request, an additional 20 State-owned corporations and groups
will transfer their ownership rights to the SCIC from 2015-2016.
The firm was awarded with the Labour Order, the first class,
on the occasion.
The return on equity ratio averages 15 per cent to 17 percent,
bringing a total after-tax profit of more than VND30 trillion ($1.36
billion).
Compared to 2005, its turnover has soared 65-fold, total
assets are up 14 times, State budget contribution is up 41 times and
after-tax profits have increased 61.5 times.
The SCIC has offloaded State capital to pull in VND5.36
trillion ($243.6 million) and its portfolio now comprises 230 firms with a
booking value of VND17 trillion ($772 million) and market value of VND78
trillion ($3.54 billion).
Its total equity is currently valued at nearly VND35 trillion
($1.59 billion).
It has also taken the lead in equitisation with 90 percent of
its single-member limited liability companies going public.
In his speech, Deputy PM Ninh asked the SCIC to continue
improving its operating model, speeding up divestment in several companies
and performing its role as a shareholder in several large-scale and efficient
firms.
Apartment building fees under debate
Residents of high rise apartment buildings are concerned that
management boards are squandering maintenance fees.
According to the law, the owner of an apartment has to pay an
extra two percent of the total apartment sale price for the maintenance of
facilities inside the building.
Draft regulations on apartment block management, proposed by
the Ministry of Construction (MoC), clarify that the building's developers
are in charge of opening a bank account for temporary management of the fees
when the building management board has not yet been established.
The fees must be given to the management board no later than
seven days after the board is set up.
In a seminar to discuss the draft regulations on Friday,
Nguyen Nhu Vinh, general director of Hoang Thanh real estate company, said
that many management boards have been unclear in using the fees.
The maintenance fees may be massive in many apartment
buildings, comprising up to millions of US dollars.
"If the fees are used effectively, they can last from 40
to 50 years. Otherwise, they can run out within ten years. It is necessary to
advise residents on how to use the fees effectively," Vinh added.
The holders of the fees' bank account should include one
person representing the developers and two members of the building management
board to prevent the risks in case the board members sell their apartments or
no longer live there, suggested Nguyen Quoc Hiep, chairman and general
director of the Global Petrol Investment Joint Stock Company (GP Invest).
Nguyen Manh Khoi, deputy head of the MoC's Housing and Real
Estate Market Management Agency, said that to ensure the correct use of the
fees, strict rules on the board's financial management have been imposed in
the draft regulations.
Accordingly, the management board can only open a bank account
when they prove all documents required by the bank. The amount of withdrawn
money and the number of bank account holders must be determined at the
board's meetings.
The board members are allowed to withdrawn the money when 100
per cent of the board members agree, he said.
Regarding the fact that many apartment building developers
have not returned maintenance fees to the management board even after the
board has been established, Khoi said that the People's Committees would
apply coercive methods to force developers to refund the fees.
Recently, the Viet Nam Construction and Import-Export Joint
Stock Company (Vinaconex) was reported to delay the refund of VND70billion
(US$3 million) of fees for N05 Trung Hoa Nhan Chinh apartment building
residents in Ha Noi.
Earlier, people living in Keangnam Ha Noi Landmark Tower, the
country's highest skyscraper, demanded their money back from the South Korean
developer.
VN, Thai firms eye closer ties
Vietnamese and Thai businesses discussed increased
co-operation between themselves at the second congress of the Business
Association of Thai Viet Nam (BAOTV) held in Udon Thani Province on Sunday.
Association chairman Nguyen Quang Trung said in its six-year
existence the association has organised many activities to connect Vietnamese
and Thai businesses.
More than 200 business delegations have visited Thailand to
explore business opportunities, he said.
Besides, hundreds of Thai businesses and Vietnamese-owned
businesses in Thailand were helped by the association in looking for
investment and business opportunities in Viet Nam, he said.
BAOTV is also organising programmes to help its members
prepare for the ASEAN Economic Community that would come into being at the
end of this year, he said.
Deputy Foreign Minister Vu Hong Nam, who is also chairman of
the Committee for Overseas Vietnamese Affairs, said he was delighted to see
the success of Vietnamese business people in Thailand.
He gave away certificates of merit to BAOTV and Trung for
their achievements in mobilising the Vietnamese community.
The congress elected new leaders for 2015-17, including Ho Van
Lam who became the chairman.
Lam said the association plans to increase exchanges and
strengthen businesses links between Vietnamese entrepreneurs in Thailand and
their Vietnamese and Thai counterparts.
It would also work with authorities in Viet Nam to provide its
members with essential legal information pertaining to the country to
facilitate investment and business.
S Korea imports Vietnamese mangoes
Cao Lanh District in the Mekong Delta province of Dong Thap
shipped nearly 20 tonnes of Hoa Loc and Cat Chu mangoes to the Republic of
Korea in early October, showing positive signs for local farmers.
According to the My Xuong Mango Collective, the price of Cat
Chu mangoes ranges from VND20,000 to VND25,000 ($0.9-$1.1) per kilogram, and
Hoa Loc mangoes range from VND50,000 to VND70,000 ($2.25-$3.15).
The collective has received weekly orders of up to 30 tonnes
of mangoes, which are grown under the Vietnam Agriculture Practice (VietGAP)
and the Global Good Agricultural Practice (GlobalGAP) standards from KTC
Ltd., Co. for export.
Da Nang transfers stake in Vinataba
Da Nang has transferred 30 per cent of its stake in Viet Nam
National Tobacco Corporation (Vinataba), worth VND56.6 billion (US$2.7
million), to the company as part of an agreement.
Vice-Chairman of the city's People's Committee Phung Tan Viet
said the transfer of funds would help Vinataba restructure its business and
production for future growth.
The stake will be used for investment by Da Nang Tobacco
Company, a subsidiary of the corporation.
Vinataba Chairman Vu Van Cuong said the corporation earned
VND11.217 trillion (US$534 million) in revenue in the first five months of
this year, contributing more than VND3.2 trillion ($152 million) to the state
budget.
PNJ cancels share sale, opts for bond issuance
Phu Nhuan Jewelry JSC (PNJ) has decided it will not sell 20
million shares to the company's current shareholders, local media reported
yesterday.
The plan was announced early this month to raise the company's
capital by 20 per cent to VND1.2 trillion (US$52.4 million).
Instead, PNJ will issue bonds this year, which will be worth a
maximum of VND500 billion ($22.2 million), valued at VND1 million ($44.4) per
bond and will mature within one year.
The amount of money collected from the bond issuance will be
spent on restructuring VND350 billion ($15.6 million) of the company's
short-term loans and developing a retailer network, which is worth VND150
billion ($6.6 million). The bonds will be divided into two types – a secured
bond, which are stakes owned by shareholders with benefits such as dividends
and rights to purchase shares, and non-secured bonds. The bond interest rate
will be based on the market interest rate at the issuance date and will be
fixed until the maturity date.
BVSC reports lower Q3 revenue
Bao Viet Securities Corporation (BVSC) has reported its
revenue in the third quarter of this year fell 16 per cent from a year ago to
VND65.74 billion (US$2.92 million).
Of which, revenue from the brokerage sector fell 27 per cent
and revenue from trading stocks dropped 33 per cent.
During the third quarter of this year, BVSC reduced its
operation costs by 44 per cent to VND21.64 billion ($962,000), however, its
management cost was up 149 per cent to VND27.46 billion ($1.22 million).
Consequently, BVSC recorded a net profit of VND17 billion ($753,333) in the
third quarter, a decrease of 41 per cent from a year ago.
In the first nine months of this year, BVSC recorded a revenue
of VND212 billion ($9.42 million) and a net profit of VND84.2 billion ($3.74
million), equal to 70 per cent of this year's target.
Real estate developers in final rush
Developers are actively pushing their sales campaigns to sell
units to Vietnamese buyers before the year ends.
Last week, CapitaLand launched 200 units in the Orchid
building, the best building of Vista Verde, with more than 100 units
registered to buyers.
According to Nguyen Thuy Duong, director of Marketing and
Business of South CapitaLand, more than 100 units were sold at the launching
ceremony, confirming the allure of the real estate market in the eastern
areas of Ho Chi Minh City. Located at an ideal venue in District 2, Vista
Verde is expected to produce high profit, with the price increasing by 30 per
cent since the end of 2014.
Meanwhile, another domestic developer, Vingroup, has been
continuously pushing its projects. Among these is Vinhomes Central Park in Ho
Chi Minh City, with thousands of units on offer.
Vingroup has also announced its new partnership with Saigon
Port to develop a 32-hectare prime site at the Khanh Hoi port waiting to be
removed in District 4 in the eastern area of the city.
Dai Quang Minh Real Estate Company has also introduced two new
condominium projects in District 2 to the market last week. The Sarica
Condominium and Sadora Apartment projects will offer combined 780 units to the
market. Those projects will be finished in mid-2017.
In the third quarter of 2015, positive market momentum
continued, boosting new launch activities and sales performance.
According to CBRE Vietnam, a total of 10,114 new units were
launched from 26 projects, triple the number seen in the same period last
year. By location, new supply from the south, encompassing districts 4, 7, 8,
and Nha Be, accounted for 36 per cent of the total newly-launched stock,
while the recent hot spot in the east (districts 2, 9, Binh Thanh, and Thu
Duc) accounted for a more modest 29 per cent this quarter.
“The market is believed to witness more competition between
these two hot zones in the coming time, especially in the context that the
Thu Thiem new urban area in the east has begun development, with the first
condominium blocks, called Sarimi, being launched in the third quarter of
2015,” said Dung Duong, director of CBRE Vietnam’s Research and Consulting.
The review quarter also witnessed a repackaging of some
long-delayed projects where new developers have taken over and revitalised
developments by providing more finance or redesigning the unit layout, size,
and mix.
These projects include City Gate Towers (District 8), Linh Tay
Tower (Thu Duc district), and C.T. Plaza Nguyen Hong (Go Vap District).
CBRE Vietnam commented that overall, market sentiment remained
relatively positive despite the “ghost month,” with good cash inflow from
buyers.
An estimated 7,862 units were sold during the quarter,
signifying an increase by 88 per cent year-on-year. Continuing the
trend from last quarter, high-end apartments still account for an increasing
share of units sold.
For the first nine months of 2015, high-end apartment sales
accounted for 35 per cent, up from the 32 per cent reported at the end of
2014.
However, cautiously looking at the sales performance of new
launches in the third quarter of 2015 showed an absorption rate of 35.1 per
cent, partly due to the fact that buyers lack confidence in suspended
developments.
Central Highlands province to revoke six project licences
The Central Highlands Dak Nong Province will revoke the
investment licences of six tourism projects because of their slow
commencement of work.
Deputy Director of the provincial department of culture,
sports and tourism Bui Quang Mich said the six ecotourism investment
projects, with a total registered capital of VND1 trillion (US$47.6 million),
were to cover an area of 900ha, but the investors were yet to start
construction.
He said Dray Sap-Gia Long and Fairy Fall Ecotour projects were
the largest projects with total investments of VND700 billion ($33.3
million).
He said the province has invited powerhouses to take the place
of the delayed construction projects.
According to the province's investment promotion centre, the
Viet Nam National Coal and Mineral Industries Group has registered capital of
VND722 billion ($34.4 million) for its Nhan Co bauxite project.
Last year, the Nguyen Kim Trading and Apartment Complex and
the International Hospital were the two largest domestic projects with a
total investment of VND7.2 trillion or more than $343 million.
The province has received only nine foreign direct investment
projects with $34.29 million in capital.
Korea's Intellect Company has proposed to invest in a solar
cell plant in the province.
VEF/VNA/VNS/VOV/SGT/SGGP/Dantri/VET/VIR
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Thứ Ba, 20 tháng 10, 2015
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